104 -( > . .:... C\ . ... .. . #" . ' . .. ." --: Altogether, now. . . the bra and slip combined into one lacy nylon figu re-shaper. Olga gives it fit with hidden shell cups adds light security ,,\ ith Lycra * spandex to hug the back In white and un-pale pastels, Sizes 32 to 36, A-B. . . L3.00. At stores with fashion spirit. ..:r >:i. of , *DuPont's Reg. T. M. behind every LGJt there really is an Olga """ < .",. .:<r '....... "< . w ..fj<<.. ":'N.. ;... ..<'. >:. .::: ... .. .. '.: .,.,. > ...... .,/... .;":- "'- .-x", .:...." Does The HalIDlark Make It Any Better? .. .\ 1$ \.. In value, yes" >ii;..... "'"- The Williamsburg Hallmark ., on '1 piece oJ pe\\7ter, or any ., m :: r ...:.: .. >' \Villiarnsburg Reproduction, ,t ' , f.: < is your assurance of quality and . ' . .,. ') ,, authenticity. .. o" >< On this classic tankard, the Ha.llmark tells you the pewter is made from an ancient formula of tin, copper and antimony-no lead.. Yon know that no two tankards are exactly alike". Each one is cast, turned, burnished and polished by hand. ""The Williamsburg Hallmark is reserved for those products that are crafted by one of the 17 licensed manufacturers of home furnishings and furnÎ ture. For a colorful 144-page book full of Williamsburg@ Reproductions, send $2..50 to Craft House, Dept. A-2 Williamsburg, Virginia 23185.. @Jde1Itifìl!$trad m(lyks <4 Williawsbttrg R st()rtltilJtlI1nc.1 Reg. U.S. Pat. Off. ;<- ;. \ . .., teenth-century lamp called the Pigeon lamp, after its inventor, M. Pigeon. The lamp is nine and a half inches tall, and its brass base has a square-cut handle that can be used for attaching the lamp to th e wall, and has holes in it for that purpose. There is a grace- fu]]y rounded chimney and a knob for adjusting the flame. This is a most ap- pealing fixture, and the price is $10. At Pierre Deux we also saw some antique long-stemmed absinthe glasses that re- semble those in Impressionist paintings dnd may have been the very ones their subjects used. They are thick, solid, and capacious, with simple cut-glass decora- tions at the base of the conical howls. They cost $4 each, and they would he fine wineglasses for outdoor luncheons. MexIcan glass has long been a fa- vorite of summer hostesses; Its rough- hewn character and nch, lovely colors seem right for the outdoors. The thoughtful people who replenish the glass cupboards of their friends at Christmastime (even the thick Mexi- can glass breaks) might go down to the colorful establishment of Fred Leigh ton, 1 77 Macdougal Street, just off \Vashington Square, where a col- lection of hand-blown Mexican glass is on permanent display in a great variety of size" and shapes and hues ; namely, turquoise, blue, green, brown, and clear glass tinged with green. A very big tulip goblet costs $3.25, a small Old- .Fashioned glass is sixty-five cents, a medium-sized tumbler is eighty-five cents, and a large highball glass IS $1.25. Bloomingdale's has some gray stoneware ornamented wIth blue or blue-and-green flower or fruit patterns which looks like the old-fashioned salt- glaze stoneware crocks one used to see in country stores before the decorators came and took them all away A two- quart pitcher paInted with a few blue flowers done in broad, free strokes is $ 5, a small pitcher with a more con- CIse pattern-a cluster of blue grapes and green leaves-is $ 7, and a mus- tard pot with the saIne grape pattern is $3. Ld Cui"inière, 903 Madison A venue (72nd Street), has some nice Staffordshire-earthenware ill e as u rin g pitchers decorated on the uutside with pI ush English roses in basket" and marked with measurernents within. The pitchers are white with a choIce of brown, blue, or red roses, and come In three sizes: eighteen ounces, for $4.50; twentv-fuur ounces, for $5.50; and forty-eight ounces, for $6.5 O. La CUI- sinière also sells oval ç;oap dishes in the same flower pattern and colors, for $ 1 .95 each. Bonniers' clay cooking ware from